Peptide synthesis by prior thiol capture. 2. Design of templates for

2. Design of templates for intramolecular O,N-acyl transfer. 4,6-Disubstituted dibenzofurans as optimal spacing elements. D. S. Kemp, Nicholas G. Gala...
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J. Org. Chem. 1986,51,1829-1838 Costello of Prof. K. Biemann's laboratory for high resolution and field desorption mass spectra, N. Fotouhi for conditions for the solid-phae o p t h t i o n of Kolovos for Optimization Of the protoco17 and Dr* conversion of 7 to 8. Registry No. 3, 101697-54-5;6, 19261-06-4;7, 41799-27-3;8,

1829

101697-55-6;9a, 101697-56-7;9b, 101697-64-7;9c, 101697-65-8; 9d, 101697-66-9; 101697-67-0;9f, 101697-681;gg, 101697-69-2; 1la, 101697-57-8;1lb, 101697-70-5;12,101697-58-9;17,10171151-7; 18,101697-61-4;19,101697-62-5;ScmC1,26555-40-8;BOCL-Ala-OH, 15761-38-3; Z-L-Cys(Trt)-OH.NHEtz,53308-88-6; BOC-L-Cys(Scm)-OMe, 53907-23-6; BOC-Gly-L-Phe-OSu, 101697-71-6;dibenzofuran, 132-64-9.

*,

Peptide Synthesis by Prior Thiol Capture. 2. Design of Templates for Intramolecular 0,N-Acyl Transfer. 4,6-Disubstituted Dibenzofurans as Optimal Spacing Elements D. S. Kemp,*it Nicholas G. Galakatos,tpt Benjamin Bowen,+ and Kenneth Tan' Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, and The Arthur Scott Laboratory of Chemistry, Reed College, Portland, Oregon 97202 Received March 26, 1985

A central feature of the strategy for amide bond formation by prior thiol capture is an intramolecular acyl transfer across a template that links the phenolic ester function of one peptide with an unsymmetrical disulfide involving the side chain of the N-terminal cysteine residue of a second peptide. The structures of 4-hydroxy6-mercaptodibenzofuran (3) and 4-hydroxy-6-mercaptophenoxythih(4) are established by 'H NMR spectra of deuterated dibenzofuran and phenoxythiin derivatives. On the basis of the criterion of effective molarity, a dibenzofuran template for intramolecular acyl transfer is shown to be approximately2 orders of magnitude more efficient than a phenoxythiin. An effective local concentration of ca.5 M and a Hammett p value of 2.6 are observed for the intramolecular acyl-transfer reaction 1 2. +

In the accompanying paper we have described general features of a strategy of prior thiol capture, which provides a new methodology for forming amide bonds between medium to large sized peptide fragmenk3.l A key step in this strategy is the intramolecular 0,N-acyl transfer reaction 1 2, which is facilitated by the selection of a

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intermediates containing the more orthodox five- or sixmembered rings. In this paper we give a brief account of the reasoning and experiments that have led us to a selection of a dibenzofuran as a template for the acyl-transfer step of the thiol capture strategy. An unambiguous proof of structure is given for 3 and 4, key precursors in our optimization experiments, and the acyl-transfer reaction 1 2 is defined by proof of intramolecularity and studies of the effects of solvent and substituents on its rate. Structural Characterization of 3 and 4. In the accompanying paper we report a synthesis of 3 from 4methoxydibenzofuran by metalation with n-butyllithium followed by oxidation with elemental sulfur and demethylation. Gilman and co-workers established4 that di-

-

1 X

I

s\

HO

O A

sl NA C 0 . Y H

2 X = H. CI.

NO,; 2 = H. CI

4,6-substituted dibenzofuran as an optimal linking element.2 In earlier report3 we have described our general approach to the design of molecular frameworks that facilitate intramolecular acyl transfer, and in that report we have noted advantages of large, rigid templates over smaller frameworks that result in acyl transfer through Massachusetts Institute of Technology

* Reed College.

0022-3263/86/1951-1829$01.50/0

3

4

benzofuran ibelf undergoes preferential metalation at the 4-position owing to the directing effect of the furanoid oxygen, and in the course of their work they assigned the structures of 4-hydroxy and 4-methoxydibenzofuran unambiguou~ly.~We have noted that when lithiated 4methoxydibenzofuran gives a mixture of lithio derivatives, presumably as a result of competitive coordination by the (1)Kemp, D.S.Biopolymers 1981,20,1793.

(2) Kemp, D.; Leung, S.-L.; Kerkman, D.; Galakatos, N. In Peptides1980; Brunfeldt, K., Ed., Scriptor: Copenhagen, 1981;pp 191-195. (3)Kemp, D.;Kerkman, D.; Leung, S.-L.; Hanson, G. J. Org. Chem. 1981,46,490. (4)Gilman,H.; Cheney, L.; Willis, H. J. Am. Chem. SOC.1929,51,951. (5)Flman,H.; van Em,P. J.Am. Chem. SOC.1939,61,1365.Gilman, H.; Swiss,J. Ibid. 1944,66,1884.

0 1986 American Chemical Society

1830 J . Org. Chem., Vol. 51, No. 10, 1986

Kemp et al.

Scheme I. Deuterated Derivatives of Dibenzofuran and 4-Methoxydibenzofuran

5 Br

of phenoxythiin following the procedure of Gilman and Esmay' generated the phenol 9 which was lithiated by reaction with 2 equiv of n-butyllithium in the presence of tetramethylethylenediamine. Quenching with trimethylsilyl chloride generated 10 in a remarkable yield of 90%, while oxidation with excess elemental sulfur followed by a reductive workup generated a thiol in 65% yield.

?

6

p

Me0

Me0

7

i I. BULl 2 . MeJSiCl

1

H./O

OH '

biMe3 SiMe3

bD

Me0 8

two oxygen atoms. Although it is likely that the major product is the desired 4-methoxy-6-lithiodibenzofuran, we sought independent confirmation of this assignment, relying on 'H NMR data for dibenzofuran and for the deuterated derivatives shown in Scheme I. As noted by Black and Heffernan; the 'H NMR spectrum of dibenzofuran at high field consists of four separated resonances at 6 7.17,7.29, 7.42, and 7.78. Since the former two appear as triplets of doublets (J= 8 , l Hz) and the latter as doublets of multiplets, the 4-hydrogen must be assigned either the 6 7.42 or the 7.78 resonance. The ambiguity is resolved by examination of the deuterated species 5 and 6, which are formed from bromodibenzofurans of unambiguous structure. In the 'H NMR spectrum of 5 the 6 7.42 resonance has half its normal area, and with 6 the 6 7.17 resonance is similarly reduced, allowing the following C,-H assignments to be made: 1,6 7.78; 2, 7.17; 3, 7.29; 4, 7.42. Reaction of 4-methoxydibenzofuran with 35% deuterium chloride in deuterium oxide at reflux for 15 gave dideuterated product 7 in which the unexchanged 2-hydrogen remained as a singlet and the remaining four hydrogens were each deshielded by ca. 6 0.15 relative to the corresponding hydrogen in dibenzofuran. Thus the two doublets appear at 6 7.91 and 7.61 and are assigned to the 9- and 6-hydrogens respectively. Metalation of 4-methoxydibenzofuran followed by reaction with trimethylsilyl chloride and deuterolysis generates a trideutero-4-methoxydibenzofuran with an lH NMFt spectrum that lacks the 6 7.61 resonance. Accordingly this must be 1,3,6-trideuterc-4methoxydibenmfuran (8), and the major product of lithiation of 4-methoxydibenzofuran must therefore be the 6-isomer. A 4,6-disubstituted phenoxythiin (4) was also of interest for studies of acyl transfer, and an analogous preparative route and structure proof was achieved. Hydroxylation (6)Black, P. d.; Hefferman, M. L. Austr. J . Chem. 1965, 18, 353.

I

&Me, 10

4 0

Me0

H'sI

I

The structures of 10 and therefore of 4 were established by methylation of the phenol function of 10, followed by silane cleavage with tetrabutylammonium fluoride in tetrahydrofuran containing deuterium oxide. Inspection of the proton-decoupled 13C NMR spectrum of this product showed a change in the resonance at 6 117.5 from a singlet to a broad triplet. Since this resonance appears in the spectrum of phenoxythiin and 9 and has been assigned by Isbrandt et a1.8 to the 4- or 6-carbon of phenoxythiin, the structures of 4 and 10 are established as 4,6-disubstituted phenoxythiins. Design of Templates for the 0,N-Acyl Transfer Step. The fundamental premise of the strategy of amide bond formation by prior thiol capture rests on the rational design of systems that can induce rapid intramolecular acyl transfer to a weakly basic (pK, ca. 7.0) cysteine amino function from a very weakly activated phenyl ester across a span of at least nine atoms. Acyl transfers of this type must almost certainly involve transition states that are similar in structure to the presumed acyl-transfer tetrahedral intermediate, which necessarily bears a mediumsized ring. Although the art of generating medium-sized lactones and lactams has been refined by recent synthetic work in the macrolide field, we are not aware of precedents in which the acylating agent is as unreactive as a simple phenyl ester, as it must be if the features implicit in the thiol capture strategy are to be realized. In effect, the acyl transfer of the type 1 2 must be driven by a relatively favorable entropy of ring closure, rather than by the enthalpic driving force provided by a reactive 0-acyl derivative. A convenient measure of entropic activation for a reaction of this kind is effective molarity (EM) which has been recently reviewed by Kirbyg and which is defined as the ratio of a fist-order rate constant for an intramolecular reaction to a second-order rate constant for an analogous intermolecular reaction involving the same functional groups. Typical effective molarities for the frequently studied o-oxyalkyl halides range from above lo4 for the most favorable reactions such as cyclization of 4-bromobutanol to below lo-' for formation of saturated alicyclic

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(7) Gilman, H.;Esmay, D. J.Am. Chem. SOC.1954, 76, 5787. (8) Isbrandt, L. R.; Jensen, R. K.; Petrakis, L. J.Magn. Reson. 1973, 12, 143. (9) Kirby, A. J. Adu. Phys. Org. Chem. 1980, 17,183.

J. Org. Chem., Vol. 51, No. 10, 1986 1831

Peptide Synthesis by Prior Thiol Capture systems with rings of 9 to 12 atoms.g We set an EM of 1 M as the lower limit of acceptability for the design of templates for the thiol capture reaction. In an earlier report3 we listed a set of design principles for template construction and illustrated these through demonstration of rapid, efficient intramolecular acyl transfer in the model systems 11 and 12. The latter is

11

ence of bonds B' and D for a trans,anti relationship about the forming bond C, as we have noted in an earlier study of ester aminolysis." Although the conformational bias is likely not as strong at bonds D and E, the Newman projections 14 and 15, which show local dihedral environ-

bond D

bond E

14

15

k particularly noteworthy in that acyl transfer occurs via a ring of 12 members with a half-life of 10 min in Me2S0 at 25 "C with an EM value of 18 M. It was then necessary to show that this result could be generalized to a conformationally looser backbone containing a disulfide bond. The design process that led to 11 and 12 contains three conceptual steps. First, a structure is identified that is a likely major conformation for the transition state for the acyl transfer reaction. Second, a very rigid template is found that permits a strain-free spanning of the end atoms of that conformation. The appropriately functionalized template is then synthesized and examined for evidence of intramolecular 0,N-acyl transfer. Third, if acyl transfer is seen, the model for the template-bridged transition state is reexamined to identify structural changes in the template that might further facilitate reaction. A structural family of templates is then synthesized and tested for optimal transfer efficiency using the EM value as a criterion. The starting point for application of this process to the thiol capture problem is a likely structure of the rate-determining transition state 13 for acyl transfer to an S-sulfenyl cysteine derivative.

HF S

12

C+N H bond F

I6

ments of the conformation 13, demonstrate that each of these is probably the more stable of two energetically favored conformers.l' The remaining bond F has been assigned a gauche conformation (16), similar to those seen in the X-ray structures of two crystalline forms of LLcystine.12 If these conformational restrictions are applied to structure 13, five bonds (B', C, D, E, F) are found to define a plane, and the bonds A and H which must join the template lie roughly speaking in a neighboring, parallel plane as seen in 17. From X-ray data for the cysteine moiety and some assumed torsional angles for the region of changing bonds (see Experimental Section), the OSz distance of 17 can be calculated to be 5.3 A and the C1-C2 distance (if both are aryl carbons) as 4.8 A. Variation of bond angles by 1' or torsional angles by 2" results in an average change in these distances of only 0.03 A, and, significantly, the OSz and Cl-C2 distances are relatively insensitive (0.3 A per A) to changes in the length of the breaking bond B.

13

From several studied0 it is likely that the transition states for aminolysis of phenyl esters in dipolar aprotic solvents have nearly tetrahedral character at amine nitrogen and acyl carbon, a fully formed N-C bond (bond C of 13) and a pair of partially broken NH and CO bonds (bonds B and D' of 13). The resulting cysteine structure 13 consists of a pair of terminal atoms C1 and Cz linked by no fewer than eight single bonds. It might be supposed that the number of conformationsof 13 with similar energy is too large to permit efficient acyl transfer across a rigid template that has been designed to span the Cl-Cz distance of a single conformation. In fact, there is a likely, significant restriction of the conformational population of 13, first as a result of the preference of the S-S bond for a dihedral angle near 90",'2 and second by a strong prefer(IO) Menger, F. M.; Smith, J. H. J. Am. Chem. SOC.1972,24, 3824. Fersht, A. R.;Jencks, W. P. Ibid. 1972, 94, 4733. Johnson, S. L. Adu.

Phys. Org. Chem. 1967,5, 237.

C 17

In the transition state for the reaction, bond B is likely to be longer and bond C shorter than those in the corresponding tetrahedral intermediate modeled by 17. Therefore to a large extent the influence of these changes on the OSz and C1-Cz distances should cancel. The ideal template to bridge C, and C2 of the transition state corresponding to 17 is thus seen to be a rigid, planar structure that introduces no major van der Waals interactions with the cysteine a-hydrogen and that places C - 0 and C-S bonds with an 0-S distance of ca. 5.3 A and a C1-Cz distance that is significantly shorter. (11) Kemp, D.; Choong, S.-L.; Pekaar, J. J. Org. Chem. 1974,39, 3841. (12) Jones, D.D.;Bernal, I.; Frey, M.; Koetzle, T. Acta Crystallogr.,

Sect. B 1974, 30, 1220.

1832 J. Org. Chem., Vol. 51, No. 10, 1986

Kemp et al.

Table I. Intramolecular 0,N-Acyl Transfer with o,o'-Bridged Diphenyl Ether Derivatives 19 and 20 a s Templates

temdate 19b 20' 19a

Me2S0 t i 19%h ca. IOOb 3 2

25 "C EM." M

0% distance, A

50.1 0.6

4.5

7

5.3

4.9

"EM values are first-order rate constants for 19a,b divided by second-order rate constants for reactions of 4-acetoxydibenzofuran or 4-acetoxyphenoxythiin with methyl S-benzyl-L-cysteinate: for sd); for 19b, 0.1 = (1.7 X lo4 19a, 4.6 = (9.7 X &)/(2.1 X s-I)/(2.1 X M-' 9-l). bEstimated for the component of the reaction that is concentration-independent. Reference 13.

templates. In the case of 19b, the rate data are not sufficiently precise to prove the occurrence of an intramolecular acyl-transfer reaction, and the EM value cited must therefore be regarded only as an upper limit. The phenoxythiin molecule is b~tterfly-shaped;~~ although we regard the small OS2 distance as the best explanation for the failure of this template to permit acyl transfer, some contribution from the lesser rigidity of this system is difficult to exclude.

As a template, 18 lacks rigidity, owing to the presence of a benzylic methylene group, but it was readily available from precursors of 12, and in some of its conformation it can accommodate an OS2 distance of ca. 5.3 A. We therefore examined it first. As reported previously by

4

NHzT

21a

&yJ-s

21b

CozR

As seen in 21 the dibenzofuran template provides a remarkably precise accommodation of the structural fea\ / tures of the major conformation 17 of the tetrahedral intermediate for the acyl-transfer reaction. Although we regard the impressive and practical EM value of 5 M for 18 1 = 19a as a legitimization of the assumptions of the model, Kemp and Kerkman,13 this substance gave the first eviwe stress that the model, though useful and plausible, is dence for intramolecular 0,N-acyl transfer that is connot yet proven. It is unfortunate that within the o,o'sistent with geometry 17. Not surprisingly, the reaction bridged diphenyl ether series one cannot construct a is slow ( t I l 2ca. 15 h in Me2S0, 25 "C) and complicated by template 19 with an OS2distance significantly greater than competing disulfide interchange. Since the rate data for 5.3 A. Observation of a sharp maximum in EM at this this messy reaction were imprecise, only a range of effective distance would provide a compelling demonstration of the local concentrations of 0.1 to 0.5 M could be estimated. relevance of 17 as a transition-state model, and we are With this lead we were encourated to examine the more exploring other structural series to examine this point. rigid templates 19a, 19b, and 20, for which OSz distances These and other results with templates will be reported vary by 0.7 A. In effect this series has given us three in more detail subsequently. examples of o,o'-bridged diphenyl ether derivatives 19 for Effects of Solvent and Substituent on the Reaction 1 2. Generally speaking, the aminolysis reactions of phenyl esters obey a termolecular rate law, with first-order NHzY CozR NH2YCozR terms in ester, amine, and a catalyst which is a hydrogen-bond acceptor whose role is often served by the solvent.15 The solvent effects we have observed for the reaction 1 2 fit this generalization;the reaction proceeds fastest in aprotic solvents that display strong hydrogenbond-accepting character. At 25 O C the reaction 1 2 ( Q 19a, x = no atom X = Z = H, R = Y = Me) shows no detectable progress 19b, X = S in 30 h in acetonitrile, while half-lives of 23 h, 2 h, and 2 20 h are seen in DMF, Me2S0,and a mixture of MezSO and which we can coontrol the 0-S2 distance by varying the hexamethylphosphoramide (1:5). In a mixture of the unsize of the spacing atom X. The ether oxygen common to usual protic solvent hexafluoroisopropyl alcohol and this series selected in preference to other, larger bridging MezSO (5:l) a half-life of 23 h is seen. atoms (NH or CH2) because models and crude energy The Hammett p values for the hydrolysis of phenyl calculations for 14 show that the bridging atom must be esters with good nucleophiles are frequently small, resmall to minimize van der Waals interaction with the a-CH flecting a rate-determining addition step with little or no of the cysteine residue. C-0 bond cleavage in the transition state.16 By contrast, As noted in preliminary reports, Kemp and Kerkman13 those for aminolyses of phenyl esters can be very large, and subsequently Kemp and Galakatos2 have observed particularly for reactions carried out in dipolar aprotic clean 0,N-acyl transfer with concentration-independent solvents. For example, MengerlO reports a rate ratio of rates for 20 and for 19a as templates. With 19b a slow, nearly lo5 for the reactions of phenyl and p-nitrophenyl concentration-dependent acyl transfer is seen for which acetates with pyrrolidine in acetonitrile. It was therefore a unimolecular component can be estimated. Half times of interest to determine the corresponding ratio for the and EM values for these cases are listed in Table I. intramolecular acyl transfer reaction, as well as the variFrom these data it is evident that the efficiency of acyl transfer as measured by EM values is highly sensitive to (14) Hosoya, S. Acta Crystallogr., Sect. B 1966, 20, 429. geometry within a series of structurally related, rigid

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-

(15)

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Kemp, D. In Peptides--1971;Nesvadba, H., Ed., North Holland,

1973; p 1. Su, C.; Watson, J. J. Am. Chem. SOC.1974, 96, 1854. (13) Kemp, D.; Leung, S.-L.; Kerkman, D. Tetrahedron Lett. 1981,22, 181.

(16)

Bruice, T.; Benkovic, S.Bioorganic Chemistry; Benjamin: New

York, 19BG; Vol. 1, p 20.

J. Org. Chem., Vol. 51, No. 10, 1986

Peptide Synthesis by Prior Thiol Capture

Table 11. Influence of 1- and 3-Substituents on the Rates and Effective Molarities (EM) for the Reaction 1 (MezSO,25 "C) ring substituent 1-H 1-Br 1x1

acyloxy R-group acetoxy acetoxy acetoxy Z-L-Ala-0 Z-L-Ala-0 Z-L-Ala-0 Z-L-Ala-0 Z-L-Ala-0 Z-L-Ala-0

1-H 1-Br 1x1 l-NOz 341 1,3-di-C1

k1b-l) 9.7 x 10-5 4.8 X lo4 1.1 x 10-3 7.6 x 10-5 7.8 X lo4 1.2 x 10-3 2.4 X lo-' 3.5 x 10-3 7.6 x 10-3

t1/2 2.0h 24 min 10 min 2.5h 15 min 10 min 2.8s 3.3 min 1.5 min

h/kH

(re1 rate) 1 (ref) 4.9 11 1 (ref) 10 15

3200 45 100

-

1833

2

EM" 4.6 4.5 5.1 5.7 8.6 4.9 2.7

DEqual to the ratio k , / k z , where k 2 is the second-order rate constant for aminolysis of a corresponding 1- and/or 3-functionalized 4(acy1oxy)dibenzofuranin MezSO at 25 "C containing ethyl S-benzyl-L-cysteinate. See Experimental Section for k, values.

ation of EM with change of activating substituent. The appropriate derivatives were prepared by electrophilic substitution on the S-blocked phenol 22a, followed by

x I

S

R/O

22a. 22b. 22C, 23, 24, 25. 26, 27.

I

\Scm

X=Z=H: R = H H=ZmH: R = A c H=Z=H; R=Z-L-Ala X-Br: Z = H X=CI; Z = H X=H; Z = C I X=Z=CI XnN02: Z * H

R/O

\

S H'

33b, X = H = Z ; R = A c

2

34b, 34c. 35b. 36b. 36c,

X=Z=H: R=Ac X=Z=H: R-Z-L-Ala XmCI: Z-H: R * A c X.NO2; Z - H ; R = A c X=N02: Z=H: R * Z - L - A l a

phosphine cleavage of the Scm group to form thiols (e.g., 33) which were usually not characterized but were converted directly by reaction with Boc-L-Cys(Scm)-OMe to the unsymmetrical disulfides (e.g., 34). Removal of the Boc group with HC1 or trifluoroacetic acid generated a salt of 1, suitable for the acyl-transfer studies. EM values were estimated as ratios of first-order rate constants for the acyl-transfer reactions of 1 to second-order rate constants for the aminolysis of corresponding esters 28-32 in the presence of ethyl S-benzyl-L-cysteinate.

Rd

28b. X s H = Z : R = A c 29b. X=CI: 2.H: R = A c 29c. x=CI: Z=H:R = Z - L - A l a 30. XsH: Z = C I 31, X = Z = C I 32. X=N02: Z = H

As seen by the data of Table 11, a respectable substituent effect is seen for the reactions of 1 bearing electron-withdrawing 1-substituents. The 1-nitro derivative of 1 is more than 3000 times more reactive than 1 itself, and using a u- value of 1.27 for the nitro substituent we calculate a Hammett u for this reaction of 2.6. Although the nitro derivative is probably too reactive to be used in preparative work, the bromo and chloro derivatives are likely to be useful when dealing with pbranched amino acid esters, and we are currently exploring these applications. It is striking that the values for EM are moderately consistent over 3 orders of magnitude of reactivity, supporting the view that this parameter does indeed provide a measure of the efficiency of entropic activation, independent of the degree of activation of the acylating agent. Inspection of model 21a for the transition state of the reaction 1 2 suggests an intriguing role for a buttressing 3-substituent. In 21 the oxygens and carbon derived from the acyloxy function of 1 occupy a plane perpendicular to that of the dibenzofuran, but in 1 itself one might expect a planar conformation to be preferred. Introduction of a 3-substituent should restrict the geometry of the starting material to that required by 21. A larger EM value would then be expected for a 3-chloro derivative of 1. In fact this substance was prepared and studied (Table 11) but was found to have a somewhat smaller EM value than that seen for the 1-chloro derivative. Clearly a rate-accelerating buttressing effect, if present, is outweighed by other steric factors.

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Summary

By a process of rational design we have prepared the dibenzofuran derivative 1 as our prime candidate for the intramolecular acyl-transfer step of the thiol capture strategy. This weakly activated acyl derivative owes its acylating capacity primarily to an effective positioning of the cysteine amine substituent near the electrophilic carbon of the weakly electrophilic acyloxy function. In effect, given a means of forming 1 from separate peptide fragments by a disulfide bond-generating reaction, the amide-formingstep is expected to occur with an efficiency equivalent to an intermolecular reaction run at 5 M concentration. In the accompanying paper we have demonstrated a convenient, efficient synthesis of peptide esters with structure 1. In later papers in this series we will address the problem of the disulfide-forming capture chemistry as well as practical aspects of amide bond formation between peptide fragments in the acyl-transfer step. Experimental Section IR spectra were recorded on a Perkin-Elmer Model 283-B spectrometer. High resolution

'H NMR and 13C NMR spectra

1834

J. Org. Chem., Vol. 51, No. 10, 1986

were obtained on either a Bruker WM-250 or a Bruker WM-270 instrument. Chemical shifta are reported in ppm downfield from Me4Siand splitting patterns are designated as s, singlet; d, doublet; t, triplet; q, quartet; m, multiplet; b, broad; only major or simple peaks are reported for peptide spectra. Low resolution, high resolution, and field desorption mass spectra were recorded on Varian MAT-44, CEC-110, and Finnigan MAT-731 mass spectrometers, respectively. Microanalyses were performed by Galbraith Laboratories, Knoxville, TN. Analytical thin layer chromatography was performed on glass precoated silica gel 60 plates (Merck F-254). Preparative layer chromatography was performed on Analtech GF plates, and flash chromatography was carried out on silica gel 60 (230-400 mesh) using 100% CH2Clzas eluent. HPLC was performed on a Waters system consisting of two Model 6,000-A pumps, a Model 680 automated gradient controller, a Model U6K injector, a Model 440 dual channel UV detector (280,254 nm), an extended wavelength module (229,214 nm) and a Model 730 data module. HPLC runs were conducted in the reverse-phase mode on Whatman Partisil columns. Unless otherwise specified, chemicals used were reagent grade. Solutions of butyllithium in hexane were obtained from Alpha. Methoxycarbonylsulfenyl chloride was prepared by literature proceduresIa and purified by careful spinning-band distillation. 2-Deuteriodibenzofuran (6). Literature procedures" were used to convert dibenzofuran to 2-bromodibenzofuran in 76% yield, mp 106-107 "C (lit. 107 "C). To a solution of the latter (0.80 g, 3.2 mmol) in 20 mL of anhydrous ether was added a solution of n-butyllithium (3.35 mmol) in 1.42 mL of n-hexane in one portion at 25 "C under nitrogen. The mixture was heated at reflux for 0.5 h, then cooled to 0 "C and quenched with 10 mL of a 20% solution of DC1 in D20. Extraction of the aquous phase with ether, pooling of organic phases drying, and evaporation gave 2-deuteriodibenzofuran (6),0.48 g, 88%: mp 78-79 "C after recrystallization (MeOH);IH NMR (250 MHz, CDCl,) 6 7.17 (1 H, t, J = 8 Hz, C8-H),7.29 (2 H, tm, C3-H and C,-H), 7.42 (2 H, d, J = 8 Hz, C4-Hand C6-H),7.78 ( 2 H, dm, C1-H and Cg-H);13C NMR (62.83 MHz, CDCl,) 6 111.7 (d, C4 and Cs), 120.6 (d, C1), 120.7 (d, cg),122.5 (t, cz),122.7 (d, c8),124.3 (S, C& and Ceb), 127.1 (d, C,), 127.2 (d, C7),156.3 (s, Cla and mass spectrum (70 eV), m/e 169 (M'). Anal. Calcd for C12H7DO:C, 85.21; (H D), 4.14. Found: C, 84.94; (H + D), 4.30. 4-Deuteriodibenzofuran(5). A procedure similar to that described for 6 was used. Dibenzofuran was converted first to 4-bromodibenzof~ran,~~ then to the organomagnesium complex, and then to 5 (92%) by treatment with DCl-D20 mp 81-82 "C; 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDC1,) 6 7.17 (2 H, t, J = 8 Hz, C2-Hand Ca-H), 7.29 (2 H, tm, C3-Hand C,-H), 7.42 (1H, d, J = 8 Hz,CG-H), 7.78 (2 H, dd, J = 8,l Hz, C1-H and Cg-H);I3C NMR (62.83MHz, CDC1,) 6 111.6 (t, CJ, 111.7 (d, C6),120.7 (d, C1 and Cg),122.7 (d, c2and c8),124.3 (5, C4b and CSb), 127.1 (d, c3),127.2 (d, c7), 156.2 (s,Cla), 156.3 (s,C&);mwspectrum (70 eV),m/e 169 (M'). Anal. Calcd for ClzH7DO: C, 85.21; H, 4.14. Found: C, 85.03; H, 4.38.

c,& +

4-Methoxy-6-(trimethylsilyl)dibenzofuran and 1,3,6-Trideuterio-4-methoxydibenzofuran (8). To a solution of 4methoxydibenzofuran (2.00 g, 10.1mmol) in 50 mL of diethyl ether was added under nitrogen at 25 "C 10.3 mmol of n-butyllithium in 4.70 mL of n-hexane. The mixture was heated at reflux for 10 h, then chilled to -78 "C, quenched with 1.35 mL (10.6 mmol) of trimethylsilyl chloride, and allowed to warm to 25 "C over 6 h. Water (50 mL) was added, and the resulting aqueous phase was extracted with ether. The organic phases were pooled, washed, dried, and evaporated to yield 2.5 g of yellow oil which was subjected to flash chromatography on silica gel (9:l cyclohexane-CHzClz) to yield the title compound (1.15 g, 42%): mp 59.5-61.5 "C; 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDC1,) 6 0.46 (9 H, s), 4.08 (3 (17) Buu-Hoi, N. P.; Royer, R. Red. Trau. Chim. Pays-Bas 1948,67, 175. (18) W e b , W. Ger. Pat. 1224 720, Farbenfabriken Bayer A.G., 1966; Muhlbauer,E.; Weiss, W. Ger. Pat. 1568632, Farbenfabriken Bayer A.G., 1969. Zupancic, B. Synthesis. 1975, 169. (19) Gilman, H.; Parker, P.; Baile, J.; Brown, G. J . Am. Chem. SOC. 1938, 62, 2836.

Kemp et al. H, s), 6.97 (1 H, dd, J = 8, 1 Hz), 7.23 (1 H, t, J = 8 Hz), 7.32 (1H, t, J = 8 Hz), 7.5G7.55 (2 H, m), 7.93 (1H, dd, J = 8, 1Hz); high resolution mass spectrum, calcd for Cl6Hl8O2Si270.1076, found 270.1059. To a solution of the above silyl derivative (7.1 mg, 26 @mol) in 0.60 mL of methanol-d was added a 35% solution of DCl in DzO. The mixture was heated at reflux for 15 h, then poured into water, and extracted 3X with CHZClz.The pooled extracts were washed, dried, evaporated, and dried under vacuum to yield 6.1 mg of oil, purified by preparative layer chromatography to give 3.8 mg of 8 (72%): 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDC1,) 6 4.06 (3 H, bt, C7-H), 7.92 (1 H, dd, J = 8, 1 Hz, Cl-H); high resolution mass spectrum, calcd for CI3H7D3O2201.0869, found 201.0860. 1,3-Dideuterio-4-met hoxydibenzofuran (7). When 4methoxydibenzofuran was subjected to the above conditions the dideutero 7 was obtained, contaminated with monodeuterated derivatives: 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDC1,) 6 4.03 (3 H, s, Ar OCH,), 6.95 (0.16 H, d, J = 8 Hz, Cs-H), 7.24 (1H, bs, CZ-H), 7.33 (1H, t, J = 8 Hz, Ca-H), 7.44 (1 H, t, J = 8 Hz, CT-H), 7.52 (0.32 H, d, J = 8 Hz, C1-H), 7.61 (1 H, d, J = 8 Hz, Ce-H), 7.91 (1 H, d, J = 8 Hz, Cg-H). 4-(Trimethylsilyl)-6-hydroxyphenoxythiin(10). By literature procedures,20diphenyl ether was converted to phenoxythiin and thence to 4-hydroxyphenoxythiin(9). Reaction of 9 (101 mg, 0.47 mmol) in 3 mL of THF containing 0.20 mL (1.3 mmol) of tetramethylethylenediamine at -12 "C with 0.45 mL (1.0 mmol) of n-butyllithium in n-hexane was carried out for 12 h at -12 "C. The solution was then quenched with 0.2 mL (1.4 mmol) of trimethylsilyl chloride and allowed to warm to 25 "C (4 h). The mixture was poured into 5% NaHC0, and extracted 3X with CH2C12;the pooled organic phases were extracted with NaHCO,, dried, and evaporated. The oily residue was dissolved in 4 mL of methanol containing 50 WL1 N HCl. After 5 min, the mixture was partitioned between CH2C12and excess 1 N NaOH. Separation of the CH2Clzlayer, washing, drying, and evaporation gave 117 mg of 10,90%,as a viscous yellow oil: 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDCl,) 6 0.50 (9 H, s), 5.53 (1H, bs), 6.69 (1H, dd, J = 8, 1Hz), 6.86 (1 H, dd, J = 8, 1 Hz), 6.97 (1 H, t, J = 8 Hz), 7.0. (1 H, t, J = 8 Hz), 7.191 (1 H, dd, J = 8, 1 Hz), 7.29 (1 H, dd, J = 8, 1 Hz); mass spectrum (70 eV), m/e (relative intensity) 288 (M+, loo), 257 (79), 242 (48), 136 (47), 75 (65). 4-(Trimethylsilyl)-6-methoxyphenoxythiin and 6Deuterio-4-methoxyphenoxythiin. To a solution of 100 mg of 10 (0.35 mmol) in 4 mL of acetone at 40 "C was added 72 mg (0.52 mmol) of anhydrous KzC03and 0.2 mL (3 mmol) of methyl iodide. After l l h at reflux, the solvent was evaporated, and the residue was partitioned between CHZClzand water. The organic phases were combined, extracted with 1 N NaOH, washed, dried, and evaporated. Kugelrohr distillation of the oily residue gave a solid: mp 97-99 "C, 98 mg, 93%; 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDC1,) 6 0.42 (9 H, s, TMS), 3.87 (3 H, s, Ar OCH,), 6.69 (1 H, dd, J = 8, 1 Hz), 6.75 (1 H, dd, J = 8, 1 Hz), 6.96 (1 H, t, J = 8 Hz), 7.01 (1 H, t, J = 8 Hz), 7.12 (1 H, dd, J = 8, 1 Hz), 7.26 (1 H, d d, J = 8, 1 Hz); mass spectrum (70 eV), m/e (relative intensity) 302 (M', loo), 287 (87), 244 (27), 144 (60), 136 (30). Anal. Calcd for C16H18022SSi:C, 63.54; H, 6.00; S,10.60; Si, 9.29. Found: C, 63.66; H, 5.97; S, 10.45; Si, 9.09. To a solution of 54 mg (0.18 mmol) of the above silyl derivative in 2 mL of THF was added at 25 "C 10 FL (0.45 mmol) of D20 and 180 mg (0.66 mmol) of tetrabutylammonium fluoride in 0.2 mL of THF. After 1 h of stirring the solution was quenched with D20 and extracted 3X with CHzC12. The pooled extracts were washed, dried, and evaporated to give 6-deuterio-4-methoxyphenoxythiin as an oil, 39 mg, 94%: 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDC1,) 13 3.89 (3 H, s), 6.69 (1 H, dd, J = 8, 1 Hz), 6.73 (1H, dd, J = 8 Hz), 6.9G7.04 (2 H, m), 6.07-7.11 (2 H, m); ',C NMR (67.93 MHz, CDC1,) 6 56.3 (Ar OCH,), 111.1 (d), 117.5 (t, C6), 118.7 (d), 120.4 (s), 121.4 (s),124.0 (d), 124.5 (d), 126.6 (d), 127.5 (d), 141.8 (s), 149.2 (s), 152.3 (s); mass spectrum (70 eV), m/e 231 (M'). 4-Hydroxy-6-mercaptophenoxythiin(4). To a solution of 9 (0.51g, 2.35 "01) in 15 mL of THF containing 1 mL (6.6 mmol) of tetramethylethylenediamine at -15 "C under nitrogen was added 2.4 mL (5 mmol) of a solution of n-butyllithium in n-hexane. (20) Suter, C. M.; Maxwell, C.

E. Org. Synth. ( N . Y . ) 1938, 28, 64.

Peptide Synthesis by Prior Thiol Capture After 5 h at -15 "C the solution was treated with 0.24 g (7.5 mmol) of sulfur and allowed to warm to 25 "C (4h). The resulting black mixture was added to 1g of lithium aluminum hydride slurried in 5 mL of THF, and after 10 min, excess hydride was decomposed cautiously with methanol. The mixture was acidified (1N HC1) and extracted 3X with CH2C12.The pooled extracts were washed with 1 N HCl and water, dried, and evaporated to yield 0.37 g of orange solid, 65%, which was used directly in the synthesis of 19b (X= S). 4-Acetoxyphenoxythiin.A solution of 1.0 g (4.6 mmol) of 4-hydroxyphenoxythiin (9)in 3.2 mL of pyridine was treated with 2.3 mL of acetic anhydride and stirred 20 h at 25 "C. The mixture was then poured on a slurry of ice and 1N hydrochloric acid which was extracted with dichloromethane. The pooled extracts were washed with 1N hydrochloric acid, water, and brine, then dried, and evaporated to yield 1.1g, 93%, mp 88 "C. Recrystallization from ethanol gave 0.88 g, 74%, mp 88.5-90 "C. Anal. Calcd for Cl4HI0O3S:C, 65.10; H, 3.90. Found: C, 64.92; H, 4.01. 4-Hydroxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldit hio)phenoxyt hiin, 4-

J. Org. Chem., Vol. 51, No. 10, 1986

1835

mass spectrum, calcd for C1,Hl2O5S2348.0126, found 348.0115. A solution of 1.43 g (4.67 mmol) of 22a and 1.05 g (5.1 mmol) of N-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-alanine in 35 mL of dichloromethane was cooled to 0 "C and treated with 1.2 g (5.8 mmol) of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. The resulting mixture was stirred at 0 "C, for 2 h, then at 25 "C, for 16 h, when the precipitate was filtered and washed with cold dichloromethane. The combined filtrates were washed with cold citrate buffer (pH 3.5,0.5 M), with cold sodium bicarbonate solution, and with water. After drying and evaporation the solution yielded a white residue that was suspended in 50 mL of ethyl acetate and warmed briefly to leave residual urea undissolved. The solution was cooled, filtered, concentrated to 25 mL, and again filtered to remove urea. After repetition of this sequence, the solution was evaporated to leave 2.17 g, 97%, of a residue that was recrystallized from 10 mL of ethyl acetate to give 1.33 g of 22c,white needles, mp 148-149 "C, 60%. Cooling to -20 "C and concentration yielded a second crop, 11%: mp 146-148 "C; field desorption mass spectrum, m / e 4/6 (M+ - 1). Anal. Calcd for C22H2307NS2: C, 55.33; H, 4.85; N, 2.94; S,13.43. Found: C, 55.53; H, 5.01; N, 2.94; S, 13.69.

Acetoxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)phenoxythiin, and Methyl N-tert-Butoxycarbonyl-S-[4-acetoxy-6-phenoxyl-Bromo-4-hydroxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)dibenzofuran (23a), l-Bromo-4-acetoxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithiinylthiol-~-cysteinate (19b)(NH N-Boc). To a solution thi0)dibenzofuran (23b), and l-Bromo-4-(benzyloxyof 0.38 g (1.5 mmol) of 4-hydroxy-6-mercaptophenoxythiin (4) in 2.5 mL of methanol was added with stirring 0.16 mL (1.7 mmol) carbonyl-~-alanyloxy)-6-(met hoxycarbony1dithio)dibenzofuran (23c). To a solution of 34 mg (0.11 mmol) 4-hydroxyof methoxycarbonylsulfenyl chloride. After 2 h only a trace of 6-(methoxycarbony1dithio)dibenzofuran(22a)in 1 mL of glacial starting material could be detected by TLC, and the 0.37 g of acetic acid was added dropwise over 2 min 224 pL (0.11 mmol) orange oil obtained after evaporation was dissolved in 5.5 mL of

-

acetic anhydride and treated at 25 "C with a drop of concentrated sulfuric acid. After 3 h the solution was poured onto ice-aqueous sodium bicarbonate and extracted with dichloromethane. After washes with sodium bicarbonate, brine, and water, drying, and evaporation, the resulting residue was further dried by azeotropic evaporation of acetonitrile (2 X 25 mL). The oily product, 0.43 g, was homogeneous by TLC and HPLC and was dissolved in 7 mL of a 4:l dioxane-water mixture and added under nitrogen to 0.3 mL (ca. 1.07equiv) of freshly distilled tri-n-butylphosphine. After 35 min the solvent was evaporated, and the oily residue was dissolved in 5 mL of 14:l hexafluoroisopropyl alcohol-chloroform and added to a solution of 0.25 g (ca. 0.75 equiv) of methyl N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-S-(methoxycarbonylthio)-L-cysteinate2' in 4 mL of hexafluoroisopropyl alcohol. After 0.5 h the solvent was evaporated, and the oily residue was purified by preparative layer chromatography (Analtech GF 1000 pm silica gel; 9:l chloroform-ethyl acetate) to give 19b (NH N-Boc) homogeneous to TLC and HPLC, as a white powder, 120 mg, 30% from 4; mp 108.5-112.0 "C; 'H NMR (90MHz, CD2C12)6 7.52-7.59 (2 H, overlapping doublets), 7.46-7.50 (4 H, m), 4.19 (3 H,s), 2.93 (3 H, s), 1.90 (9 H, s).

-

4-Hydroxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)dibenzofuran (22a), 4-Acetoxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)dibenzofuran(22b), and 4-(Benzyloxycarbonyl-~-alanyloxy)-6-(methoxycarbony1dithio)dibenzofuran (22c). To a solution of 4hydroxy-6-mercaptodibenzofuran (3) (1.02 g, 4.72 mmol) in 10 mL of methanol was added in one portion with vigorous stirring 0.5 mL (5.45 mmol) of methoxycarbonylsulfenyl chloride. The mixture was stirred at 25 "C for 2 h and then was concentrated, and the residue was dried by azeotropic distillation with acetonitrile (2 X 25 mL) to yield 1.64 g of a viscous oil. Flash chromatography (eluant dichloromethane)yielded an oil that solidified on standing (1.13 g, 78%). Trituration with 1:l ether-hexane gave 1.01 g of 22a,white powder: mp 106-108 "C, 70%; high resolution mass spectrum, calcd for C14H1004S2 306.002, found 306.005. Anal. Calcd for Cl4Hl0O4S2:C, 54.89; H, 3.29; S,20.93. Found C, 54.89; H, 3.42; S,21.07. To a solution of 22a (176 mg, 0.575 mmol) in 2.5 mL of acetic anhydride at 25 "C was added 5 pL of sulfuric acid (concentrated). After 4 h the solution was poured onto ice-sodium bicarbonate (5%), and the mixture was extracted with dichloromethane. The combined extracts were washed with 5% sodium bicarbonate, water, and brine, then dried, and evaporated. The oily residue was dried by azeotropic distillation a t reduced pressure of acetonitrile (2 X 25 mL) and further dried under vacuum to yield 194 mg of a white powder, 22b: mp 95-96 "C, 97%; high resolution (21)Hiskey, R. G.; Muthukumaraswamy, N.; Vunnam, R. J. Org. Chem. 1975,40,950.

of a 0.5 M solution of bromine in acetic acid. After 30 min of stirring at 25 "C the solution was poured into water and extracted with chloroform. The combined extracts were pooled, washed with water and brine, dried, and evaporated. Purification of the resulting oil by preparative layer chromatography (1000 pm; 9:l chloroform-ethylacetate) afforded a white foam, 23a,33 mg, 76%: high resolution mass spectrum, calcd for C14H904S2Br 383.9126 and 385.9105, found 383.9122 and 385.9124. A solution of 23a was acetylated as described for 22b to give a 99% yield of crude product. Trituration with hexane gave 79% of a fluffy white solid, 23b,mp 136-139 "C: 'H NMR (270 MHz, CDCls) 6 8.49 (1H, d, J = 7.8 Hz), 7.80 (1H, d, J = 7.8 Hz), 7.5 (1H, d, J = 8.3 Hz), 7.41 (1 H, t, J = 7.8 Hz), 7.15 (1 H, d, J = 8.8 Hz), 2.50 (3 H, s); high resolution mas spectrum, calcd for C1&1110$2Br 425.9231 and 427.9211, found 425.9245 and 427.9224. Reaction of 109 mg (0.28 mmol) of 23a with 63.0 mg (0.28"01) of Z-L-Ala-OHand 58.3 mg (0.28 mmol) of DCC was carried out as described for 2212. Recrystallizationof the resulting clear glass from dichloromethane-petroleum ether yielded 98.7 g of 23c,57%, white needles, mp 135-136 "C.

1-Chloro-4hydroxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)dibenzofuran (24a), l-Chloro-4-acetoxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithi0)dibenzofuran (24b), and l-Chloro-4-(benzyloxycarbonyl-~-alanyloxy)-6-(met hoxycarbonyldithio)dibenzofuran (24c). A solution of 84 mg (0.27 mmol) of 22a in 2 mL of chloroform and 24 pL (0.3 mmol) of sulfuryl chloride was stirred for 2 h at 25 "C and then heated to reflux for 1.5 h. The solution was evaporated, and the oily residue was purified by preparative layer chromatography (1000 pm, 9:l chloroform-ethyl acetate) to give 43 mg of 24a as a clear oil, 47%: 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDCl3) 6 8.26 (1H, dd, J = 7.7, 1.1 Hz), 7.71 (1 H, dd, J = 7.7, 1.1Hz), 7.36 (1 H, t, J = 7.7 Hz), 7.14 (1H, d, J = 8.4 Hz), 6.97 (1 H, d, J = 8.4 high resolution mass spectrum, calcd for C14Hg04S2Cl339.9631, found 339.9638. The resulting 24a was acetylated as described for 22b to give the acetyl ester 24b in 72% yield after trituration with cold acetonitrile: mp 124.0-126.5 "C;high resolution mass spectrum, calcd for Cl6Hl1O5S2C1381.9736, found 381.9712. Using the dicyclohexylcarbodiimide procedure described for 22c the Z-L-Ala-OH ester 24c was obtained in 55% yield, homogeneous by HPLC and TLC.

3-Chloro-4-hydroxy-6-(methoxycarbon yldithio)diben zofuran (25a) and 3-Chloro-4-(benzyloxycarbonyl-~-alanyloxy)-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)dibenzofuran (25c). The general ortho-chlorination procedure of Watsonzzwas followed. Under a current of dry nitrogen 183 mg (0.596 mmol) of 22a was (22) Watson, W. D. J. Org. Chem. 1974,39, 1160.

1836 J . Org. Chem., Vol. 51, No. 10, 1986 heated to reflux in 4 mL of carbon tetrachloride. To this solution was added every 15-20 min 100-pL aliquots of a 0.9 M solution of chlorine in carbon tetrachloride until an HPLC assay revealed disappearanceof the starting phenol (nine aliquots were required). Preparative layer chromatography(Analtech GF lo00 pm, 91:0.05 chloroform, ethyl acetate, acetic acid) gave two principal bands; the upper band yielded 80.7 mg of product which was further purified by preparative HPLC (Magnum 9 ODS-2 Column, 92% methanol/8% aqueous/l% acetic acid) to yield 43.6 mg of 25a: 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDC1,) 6 7.88 (1H, d, J = 7.7 Hz), 7.71 (1 H, dd, J = 8.3, 0.8 Hz), 7.24-7.35 (4 H, m), 3.91 (3 H, s). Using the dicyclohexylcarbodiimide procedure described for 22c the 2-L-Ala-OH ester 25c was obtained in 62% yield, mp 121.5-122 "C.

Kemp e t al. mg, 64% of 29c: mp 157-158 "C; 'H NMR (270 MHz, MezSO-d6) 6 8.36 (1H, d), 8.15 (1H, d), 7.80 (1H, d), 7.67 (1H, t),7.33-7.55 (7 H, m).

3-Chloro-4-hydroxydibenzofuran(30a) and 3-Chloro-4(benzyloxycarbonyl-L-alany1oxy)dibenzofuran(30c). The general ortho-chlorination procedure of Watsonzzwas followed. Under a current of dry nitrogen, 110 mg (0.596 mmol) of 4hydroxydibenzofuran was heated to reflux in 4 mL of carabon tetrachloride. To this solution was added every 15-20 min 100-pL aliquots of a 0.9 M solution of chlorine in carbon tetrachloride until an HPLC assay revealed disappearance of the starting phenol (eight aliquots were required). Preparative layer chromatography (Analtech GF loo0 pm, 91:0.05 chloroform, ethyl acetate, acetic acid) gave two principal bands; the upper band yielded 50 mg 1,3-Dichloro-4-hydroxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)diof 30a: mp 114-115 "C;'H NMR (250 MHz, acetone-d6)6 9.36 benzofuran (26a)and 1,3-Dichloro-4-(benzyloxycarbonyl(1H, s, exch), 8.08 (1H, d, J = 7.0 Hz), 7.66 (1H, d, J = 8.0 Hz), alanyloxy)-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)dibenzofuran(26c). 7.60 (1H, d, J = 8.0 Hz), 7.53 (1H, dt, J = 7.0, 1.0 Hz), 7.40 (1 Following the procedure described for 25a but using 2 equiv of H, dt, J = 7.0, 1.0 Hz), 7.35 (1 H, d, J = 7.0 Hz). chlorine, the dichlorophenol26a was isolated by HPLC (Lobar Following the general procedure described for 22c the phenol column (Merck),41 methanol-aqueous 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid): was converted to its Z-L-Ala-OH ester 30c: mp 113-115 "C; 'H mp 150-153 "C; 'H NMR (250 mHz, CDC1,) 6 8.27 (1H, dd, J NMR (270 MHz, CDC13) 6 7.80 (1H, d, J = 8.0 Hz), 7.63 (1H, = 8.0, 1.0 Hz),7.75 (1 H, dd, J = 8.0, 1.2 Hz), 7.36 (1 H, t, J = d, J = 8.0 Hz), 7.11-7.46 (9 H, m), 1.64 (3 H, d, J = 8.0 Hz). 8.0 Hz), 7.31 (1 H, s), 3.90 (3 H, s). 1,3-Dichloro-4-hydroxydibenzofuran(31a) and 1,3-DiUsing the mixed anhydride acylation procedure described for chloro-4-(benzyloxycarbonyl-be alanyl oxy)dibenzofuran 27c the Z-L-Ala-OH ester 26c was obtained in 43% yield, mp (31c). Following the procedure described for 30a but using 130-131.5 "C. sufficient chlorine to effect nearly complete conversion to the 1-Nitro-4hydroxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)dibenzodichlorophenol as monitored by HPLC gave 31a as white crystals furan (27a) and l-Nitro-4-(benzyloxycarbonyl-~-alanyl- from carbon tetrachloride solution: mp 155-156.5 "C; 'H NMR oxy)-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)dibenzofuran (27c). The (250 MHz, CDC13) 6 8.31 (1H, d, J = 7.6 Hz), 7.63 (1 H, d, J = general nitration procedure of Colbert et alaz3was followed. A 8.3 Hz), 7.53 (1H, dt, J = 7.5,l.O Hz), 7.40 (1 H, dt,J = 8.0, 1.0 solution of 269 mg (0.878 mmol) of 22a in 3 mL of nitromethane Hz), 7.32 (1 H, s). was chilled with stirring and treated with 34.7 p L of fuming nitric Following the mixed anhydride procedure as described for 27c, acid (1equiv). After 6 h the mixture was poured into dichlorothe Z-L-Ala-OH active ester 31c was obtained in 63% yield as methane-water, and the organic phase was separated and washed white needles: mp 167-168 "C; 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDCl,) 6 8.33 with water, brine, and then dried. Evaporation yielded a brown (1H, d, J = 7.0 Hz), 7.30-7.67 (9 H, m),1.78 (3 H, d, J = 8 Hz). glass that was crystallized from acetone-water to give 82-87 mg 1-Nitro-4-hydroxydibenzofuran(32a) and l-Nitro-4of 27a, yellow plates, 27%: mp 161-162 "C, mp 171.5 "C after (benzyloxycarbonyl-L-alany1oxy)dibenzofuran(32c). A soa second recrystallization; 'H NMR (250 mHz, CDC13) 6 8.15 (1 lution of 4-hydroxydibenzofuran (310 mg, 1.85 mmol) in 3 mL H, d, J = 8.5 Hz), 7.96 (1 H, dd, J = 7.5, 1.0 Hz), 7.87 (1H, d, of nitromethane at 0 "C was treated with stirring with 75 pL of J = 8.5 Hz), 7.26-7.38 (2 H, m), 4.97 (3 H, s). fuming nitric acid. After 4 h, the reaction mixture was poured To a solution of 30.1 mg (0.135 mmol) of benzyloxycarbonylinto 30 mL of dichloromethaneand washed with water and brine. L-alanine and 17.5 pL of isobutyl chloroformate (0.135 mmol) in Drying followed by evaporation gave 32a as a brown glass, mp 1 mL of ethyl acetate at -12 "C was added 28 pL of triethylamine. 192-193 O C , after two crystallizations from acetone-water. After 15 min, 46.4 mg (0.132 mmol) of 27a in 2 mL of chloroform The above prepared nitrophenol (54 mg, 0.153 mmol) was was added at -12 "C. After 7.5 h the reaction mixture was warmed acylated as described for 22c to give 32c;preparative TLC (lo00 to 25 "C, filtered, and evaporated. The residue was dissolved in pm silica plate, 1 5 1 chloroform-ethyl acetate) gave 46.5 mg (68%) 20 mL of dichloromethane, washed with 0.5 M citric acid, water, of 32c as an oil: 'H NMR (250 mHz, CDC1,) 6 8.15 (d, J = 8.5 and brine, then dried, and evaporated. Purification by preparative H~,lH),8.02(d,J=7.6H~,lH),7.91(d,J=8.5H~,lH),7.7-7.3 layer chromatography (Analtech GF 1000 pM,9:l chloroform(m, 8 H). ethyl acetate) yielded 32.2 mg of 27c,homogeneous by TLC and General Procedure for Conversion of a 4-(Acyloxy)-6HPLC: 'H NMR (250 mHz, CDC1,) 6 8.17 (1H, d, J = 8.7 Hz), (methoxycarbony1dithio)dibenzofuran to a Methyl N 7.99 (1 H, dd, J = 6.7, 0.8Hz), 7.90 (1H, d, J = 8.7 Hz), 7.86 (1 (tert -Butoxycarbonyl)-S-(4-(acy1oxy)dibenzofuranylH, dd, J = 7.6,0.8 Hz), 7.26-7.54 (6 H, m), 1.83 (3 H, d, J = 6.7 sulfeny1)-L-cysteinate.A solution of the SScm derivative of Hz). the mercaptodibenzofuran in 4:l dioxane-water under nitrogen 4-Acetoxydibenzofuran (28). Acetylation of 4-hydroxydiis treated with an equivalent of tri-n-butylphosphine or tribenzofuran using the procedure for 22b gave a nearly quantitative ethylphosphine. The solution is lyophilized after 0.5 h, subjected yield of the title compound, mp 98.5-99.5 "C, recrystallizedfrom to high vacuum, purged with nitrogen, and treated with sufficient ethanol, mp 99-100 OC. Anal. Calcd for Cl4HI003:C, 74.33; H, hexafluoroisopropyl alcohol to dissolve the thiol. (At high con4.46. Found: C, 74.23; H, 4.50. centrations 4-(acyloxy)-6-mercaptodibenzofuransundergo a slow 1-Chloro-4-acetoxydibenzofuran(29b) and l-Chloro-40,s-acyl equilibration, and they are best converted immediately (benzyloxycarbonyl-L-alany1oxy)dibenzofuran(29c). A to the unsymmetrical disulfides without isolation.) One equivalent specimen of 1-chloro-4-hydroxydibenzofuranwas prepared by of Boc-L-Cys(SScm)-OMe2' is then added under nitrogen, and literature procedures and acetylated as described for 22b to yield after 30-40 min, the solvent is evaporated. The resulting un90% of a white powder, mp 122-127 "C, which was recrystallized symmetrical disulfide can be purified by chromatography but is from dichloromethane-pentane: mp 126-128 OC; 'H NMR (250 usually sufficiently pure to use directly in N-deblocking and acyl MHz, Me,SO-d,) 6 8.34 (1H, d, J = 7.1 Hz), 7.83 (1 H, d, J = transfer. 7.1 Hz), 7.66 (1 H, t, J = 7.1 Hz), 7.53 (1H, t,J = 7.1 Hz). Anal. 4-Acetoxy-6-mercaptodibenzofuran (33b) and Methyl Calcd for C14H903C1:C, 64.51; H, 3.48; C1,13.60. Found C, 64.70; N-(tert -Butoxyearbonyl)-S- (4-acetoxy-6-dibenzof uranylH, 3.52; C1, 13.73. sulfeny1)-L-cysteinate(34b). Following the general procedure Following the dicyclohexylcarbodiimideesterification procedure for removing the SScmn group with tri-n-butyl phosphine, 22b reported for 26, 28.4 mg (0.13 mmol) of 29b and 29 mg of benwas converted to 33b in 87% yield; recrystallization from dizyloxycarbonyl-L-alanine(0.14 mmol) were coupled to yield 34 chloromethane-pentane yielded large prisms of 33b,mp 115-116 OC. Anal. Calcd for C14Hlo03S:C, 65.10; H, 3.90; S,12.41. Found C,65.33; H, 4.05; S,12.44. To a solution under nitrogen of 22.5 mg (87.1 pmol) of 33b, (23) Colbert, J. C.;Fox, D.; Matuszak, C. J.Am. Chem. SOC.1955, 77, freshly prepared as described above, in 0.5 mL of methanol was 2448.

Peptide Synthesis by Prior Thiol Capture

J. Org. Chem., Vol. 51, No. 10, 1986 1837

concentrations were found to fit the equation kl[ 19bI + k2[ 19bI2 where kl = 1.7 X lo4 s-' and k2 = 4.3 X (M s)-'. The dibenzofuran derivatives 1 showed no evidence of second-order rate terms. (14 pmol) of triethylamine. After 0.5 h at 25 "C, the solution was Rates of reaction of the 1-nitro derivatives were too fast to evaporated, and the resulting oil was dissolved in dichloromethane measure by NMR; these reactions were followed at ca. 5 X and washed with cold 0.1 M hydrochloric acid, water, and brine, M at 360 nm using a Durum-Gibson stopped flow spectrometer. then dried, and evaporated. The residue was purified by prepRate constants for 1 (X = H, Z = C1) and 1 (X = Z = C1) were arative layer chromatography (1000 pm, 9:l chloroform-ethyl obtained from measurements only beyond 1half-life and are the acetate) to give 37.4 mg (87%) of 34b as an oil that solidified on least accurate. Rate constants for 1 (X = C1, Z = H), 1 (X = NOz, standing mp 63-64 "C; high resolution mass spectrum, calcd for Z = H), and 1 (X = H) were calculated from runs carried out to Cz3Hz5O7NS2491.1073, found 491.1081. Anal. Calcd for 2-4 half-lives. Products were usually characterized by their high CBH%O7NS2:C, 56.20; H, 5.13; N, 2.85; S, 13.04. Found C, 55.99; field 'H NMR spectra. The unsymmetrical disulfide linkage H, 5.31; N, 2.77; S, 13.20. undergoes slow disulfide interchange under a variety of manipMethyl N-(tert-Butoxycarbonyl)-S-(4-benzyloxycarbonyl-~-alanyloxy-6-dibenzofuranylsulfenyl)-~-cys~ina~ulative conditions; owing to mechanical losses on small-scale chromatography and S-S interchange during manipulation, iso(34c). To a suspension of 40.8 mg (79.8 mmol) of 22c in 2 mL lated yields of 30-50% are typical of these species, although of 4:l dioxane-water at 25 "C was added 20 pL (80.3 mmol) of spectroscopic yields are substantially higher. (In practical tri-n-butylphosphine. After 30 min the solution was lyophilized, preparative work, the species containing unsymmetrical disulfides the 50.8-mg residue was dissolved under nitrogen in 1.5 mL of are carried through the reaction sequence as intermediates, 141 hexafluoroisopropyl alcohol-chloroform, and the solution was without isolation or purification.) added quickly to 26.1 mg (80.3 mmol) of methyl N-(tert-butTrifluoroacetate Salt of Methyl S-(4-Acetoxy-6-dioxycarbonyl)-S-(methoxycarbonylsulfenyl)-L-cysteinatein 0.7 mL benzofuranylsulfeny1)-L-cysteinate(1, X = Z = H, R = Me, of HFIP. After 0.5 h under nitrogen at 25 "C the solvent was Y = OMe). A solution of 27.9 mg (42.7 mmol) of 34b in trievaporated, and the residue was dried in high vacuum to yield fluoroacetic acid was treated as described in the general procedure a white solid, 83 mg, which was purified by preparative layer to give 23 mg of salt, 81%: mp 85-88 "C; field desorption mass chromatography (lo00 pm, 9 1 chloroform-ethyl acetate) to give spectrum, m/e 555 (M+ - Tfa). 34c, mp 133-135 "C, 46.7 mg, 90%. For analysis a sample was Methyl N-Acetyl-S-(4-hydroxy-6-dibenzofuranylrecrystallized from ethyl acetate: mp 133.5-132.5 "C; 'H NMR sulfeny1)-ccysteinate(2, X = Z = H, R = Me, Y = OMe). Salt (270 MHz, CDC1,) 6 7.92 (1 H, dd, J = 8.0, 1.0 Hz), 7.83 (1H, 1 (X = Z = H, R = Me, Y = OMe) prepared as described above dd, J = 8.0, 1.0 Hz), 7.70 (1H, dd, J = 8.0,l.O Hz), 7.28-7.42 (8 was partitioned between chloroform and aqueous potassium H, m), 3.67 (3 H, s), 1.80 (3 H, d, J = 7.0 Hz), 1.40 (9 Hz, s). Anal. carbonate solution; the organic phases were pooled and evaporated Calcd for C3,H3,Nz09S2: C, 58.70; H, 5.23; N, 4.28. Found: C, to yield 33 mg of free amine which was dissolved in 0.4 mL of 58.68; H, 5.41; N, 4.17. Methyl N-(tert-Butoxycarbonyl)-S-(l-nitro-4-benzyl- dimethyl sulfoxide. After 20 h the solvent was removed in high oxycarbonyl-~-alanyloxy-6-dibenzofuranylsulfenyl)-~-cys- vacuum and the residue was purified by preparative layer chromatography (1000 pm, 1:l chloroform-ethyl acetate) to give the teinate (36c). The general procedure was used with modification. title compound as an oil, 10.1 mg, 30%: 'H NMR (250 MHz, The free thiol was found to be unstable in solution. The residue CDC1,) 6 8.53 (1H, d, J = 8.0 Hz, exchange), 8.06 (1H, dd, J = obtained from phosphine cleavage of 27c after the lyophilization 8.0, 1.0 Hz), 7.74 (1 H, dd, J = 8.0, 1.0 Hz), 7.57 (1 H, dd, J = step was treated with N-Boc-L-Cys(SScm)-OMe2' (3 equiv) in 8.0,l.O Hz), 7.43 (1H, td,J = 8.0,l.O Hz), 7.22 (1H, td, J = 8.0, dichloromethane. The desired disulfide was isolated by successive 1.0 Hz), 7.02 (1 H, dd, J = 8.0, 1.0 Hz), 3.63 (3 H, s), 1.87 (3 H, preparative layer chromatograms (Analtech GF 1000,15:1 chlos); high resolution mass spectrum, calcd for C18H1705NS2 391.0548, roform-ethyl acetate; then Merck lo00,l:l ether-hexane). The found 391.0549. resulting product, 30%, was homogeneous by TLC and HPLC: A substance with identical properties was obtained by reaction 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDCl,) 6 8.20 (1H, d, J = 8.6 Hz), 7.99 (1 of Ac-L-Cys-OMewith the SScm derivative of 3. H, dd, J = 7.9, 0.8 Hz), 7.93 (1H, d, J = 8.3 Hz), 7.84 (1 H, d, Methyl N-Acetyl-S-(l-chloro-4-hydroxy-6-dibenzoJ = 7.9 Hz), 7.27-7.51 (6 H, m), 3.71 (3 H, s), 1.80 (3 H, d, J = furanylsulfeny1)-L-cysteinate(2, X = C1, Z = H, R = Me, Y 7.5 Hz), 1.43 (9 H, s). = OMe). Species 35b was converted to 2 (X = C1, Z = H, R = Methyl N-( tert -Butoxycarbonyl)-S-(1-chloro-4-acetoxyMe, Y = OMe) by the general procedure which was purified as 6-dibenzofuranylsulfenyl)-~-cysteinate(35b). The title substance was prepared by the above procedure and purified by described above by preparative layer chromatography: mp 103-106 "C, yield 42%; 'H NMR (250 MHz, CDC1,) 6 10.25 (1 preparative layer chromatography, 42 % , as a pale oil: 'H NMR H, exchanges), 8.42 (1 H, dd, J = 7.7, 1.1Hz), 7.71 (1H, dd, J (250 MHz, CDC13) 6 8.34 (1 H, dd, J = 7.7, 1.1 Hz), 7.77 (1 H, = 7.7, 1.1Hz), 7.38 (1H, t, J = 8.5 Hz), 7.03 (1H, d, J = 8.5 Hz), dd, J = 7.7, 1.1Hz), 7.34 (1H, t, J = 7.7 Hz), 7.33 (1H, d, J = 7.03 (1H, d, J = 8.5 Hz), 3.83 (3 H, s), 2.30 (3 H, s);high resolution 8.5 Hz), 7.20 (1H, d, J = 8.5 Hz), 3.77 (3 H, s), 2.50 (3 H, s), 1.43 425.0158, found 425.0172. (9 H, s); high resolution mass spectrum, calcd for C23H2407NSzC1 mass spectrum, calcd for C18H160~S2C1 Determination of Effective Molarities. Rate constants for 525.0683, found 525.0663. the reactions of species 28-32 with ethyl S-benzyl-L-cysteinate General Procedure for N-Deblocking and Observation of in MezSO-d, at 25 "c were carried out using 'H NMR of apIntramolecular Acyl Transfer. Roughly 20 mg of the disulfide propriate resonances as described above for the intramolecular was dissolved under nitrogen at 0 "C in 0.5 mL of trifluoroacetic reactions. Rates were calculated from 3-5 data points obtained acid containing 1drop of anisole. After 25 min a t 0 "C the acid during the first 1-2 half-lives of the reaction, using roughly equal was removed in high vacuum, and traces were removed by two concentrations of amine and phenolic ester, in the range of evaporations with 5 mL of toluene followed by trituration with 0.04-0.08 M. Although we did not prove a first power dependence 1:l ether-petroleum ether. of rate on amine concentration, this dependence has been preFrom 4 to 10 mg of the trifluoroacetate salt of 1 was dissolved viously established for aminolysis reactions of phenyl esters in in 0.35-0.50 mL of MezSO-d, (0.02-0.03 M) in an NMR tube MezSOsolution.24 Effective molarities were obtained by dividing containing ca. 2 pL of tetramethylsilane. An 'H NMR spectrum each of these second-order rate constants into the first-order rate was immediately taken (NMR spectra of the salts often gave constant for the analogous dibenzofuran derivative lacking 6-thia poorly resolved spectra). The free amine was then liberated by substitution. The following rate constants were observed (M-' the addition of 1-2 equiv of triethylamine. Spectra were measured S-'1: 4-acetoxyphenoxythiin, 2.1 x 28b, 2.1 X 29b, 2.6 periodically by collecting data from 16 transients (40 s). The time X 29c, 2.0 X 30c, 7.0 X lo-,; 31c, 2.8 X 32c, 2.8 of each such measurement was taken as the midpoint of this x 10-2. interval. Rates were followed at 25 "C by measurement of the areas of at least two marker peaks, such as the resonances of the 3-hydrogen of the dibenzofuran moiety. When the phenoxythiin derivative 19b (NH N-Boc) was subjected to Boc removal and (24) Kemp, D.S. In Peptides-1971; Nesvadba, H., Ed.; North-Holdeprotonation to give 19b in MezSO, rate data at a series of land: Amsterdam, 1973; p 5. added 28.3 mg (87.1 pmol) of methyl N-(tert-butoxycarbony1)S-(methoxycarbonylsulfenyl)-L-cysteinate,21 mp 76.5-78.0 "C (lit. 78 "C), in 1 mL of 1:l chloroform-methanol, followed by 2 pL

-

1838

J. Org. Chem. 1986,51. 1838-1843

-

Demonstration of the Intramolecular Character of the 0,N-Acyl Transfer Reaction of 1 2. Solutions of 1 (X = H)in dimethyl sulfoxide-d6 were prepared at concentrations of 0.029 M and 0.21 M. The acetyl hydrogens and the aromatic 3-hydrogen were monitored to obtain rate constants of 0.35 h-' and 0.43h-l, respectively, establishing that within the error limits of the measurements, the rate constant is concentration-independent. Estimation of Atomic Distances in the Transition-State Model. The following bond lengths were obtained from diffraction data for LL-cystine:12S-S, 2.038; C-S, 1.816; C-C, 1.525; N-C, 1.484. The N-C and G O bond lengths to the acyl carbon of the transition state were assumed to be 1.49 and 1.43 A, respectively. Bond angles were obtained from the LL-cystine structurelZas shown in 13. A simple recursive distance-calculating program without energy minimization was written and used to obtain the 0-Sz distance for 17. The 0-S distance for 3 was calculated from X-ray data for d i b e n z o f ~ r a n . ~ ~

Acknowledgment. Financial support from NIH Grant GM 15453 is gratefully acknowledged. We thank Dr. C. Costello of Prof. K. Biemann's laboratory for high resolution and field desorption mass spectra. (25) Banerjee, A. Acta Crystallogr., Sect. B 1973, 29, 2070.

Registry No. 1 (X = Z = H, R = Me, Y = OMe), 101762-06-5; 1 (X = Z = H, R = Me, Y = OMe, free base), 84288-41-5;2 (X = Z = H, R = Me, Y = OMe), 101774-00-9;2 (X = C1, Z = H, R = Me, Y = OMe), 101762-37-2;3, 101697-54-5;4, 101762-07-6; 5, 63012-07-7;6, 101762-08-7;7, 101762-09-8;8, 101762-10-1;9, 101762-11-2;10,101762-12-3; 19b (NH-N-Boc), 101762-13-4;22a, 101697-58-9;22b, 101762-14-5;22c, 101697-56-7;23a, 101762-15-6; 23b, 101762-16-7; 23c, 101762-17-8; 24a, 101762-18-9; 24b, 101762-19-0;24c, 101762-20-3;25a, 101762-21-4;25c, 101762-22-5; 26a, 101762-23-6; 26c, 101762-24-7; 27a, 101762-25-8; 27c, 101762-26-9;28b, 101762-27-0;29b, 101762-28-1;2 9 ~101762-29-2; , 30a, 51596-34-0; 30c, 101762-30-5;31a, 51596-35-1;31c, 10176231-6; 32a, 101762-32-7;32c, 101762-33-8;33b, 101762-34-9;34b, 101762-35-0;3 4 ~101774-01-0; , 35b, 101762-36-1;3 6 ~101774-02-1; , Me3SiC1, 75-77-4; 2-bromodibenzofuran, 86-76-0; 4-bromodibenzofuran, 89827-45-2; 4-methoxydibenzofuran, 41799-27-3; 4-methoxy-6-(trimethylsilyl)dibenzofuran, 101762-38-3; 4-(trimethylsilyl)-6-methoxyphenoxythiin, 101762-39-4;6-deuterio-4methoxyphenoxythiin, 101762-40-7; 4-acetoxyphenoxythiin, 101762-41-8;4-hydroxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)phenoxythiin, 101762-42-9; 4-acetoxy-6-(methoxycarbonyldithio)phenoxythiin, 101762-43-0; N-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-alanine,1142-20-7; 4hydroxydibenzofuran, 19261-06-41;1-chloro-4-hydroxydibenzofuran, 41799-31-9; methyl N-(tert-butoxycarbony1)-S-(methoxycarbonylsulfeny1)-L-cysteinate,53907-23-6; methoxycarbonylsulfenyl chloride, 26555-40-8.

Phenonium Ion in [3.n IParacyclophanes. Effects of Neighboring Groups, Steric Size of Substituents, and Strain on Solvolysis Reactions Jun Nishimura,* Yukihiro Okada, and Akira Oku Department of Chemistry, Kyoto Institute o f Technology, Matsugasaki, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606, Japan

Received August 27, 1985 The effects of steric hindrance, of strain on the structure of the phenonium ion, and of the neighboring group have been studied in the solvolyses of some [3.n]paracyclophanylmethyltosylates. The reaction path was affected considerably by the steric hindrance of a methyl group attached to the cyclophane skeleton. The effect of strain on the structure of the phenonium ion was clearly demonstrated in the acetolyses of secondary tosylates. A strong anchimeric assistance to the ionization step by the [3.3]paracyclophanyl group was shown. The acetolysis rate constants of [ 3.n]paracyclophanylmethyl tosylates decreased with increasing methylene chain length. The rate enhancement is attributed to the T-T transannular interaction of the two overlapping benzene nuclei.

Studies of the phenonium ion include reports on substituent effects,' solvent effects,2 strain effect^,^ steric h i n d r a n ~ e ,direct ~ , ~ observation by NMR spectroscopy,6 and through-space participation of one benzene nucleus.' We have been interested in how the solvolysis (dynamic) path and rate might be influenced by the through-space interaction of two or more benzene nuclei oriented faceto-face, as in the cyclophanes. (1) For a review, see: Lancelot, C. J.; Cram, D. J.; Schleyer, P. v. R. Carbonium Ion; Olah, G. A., Schleyer, P. v. R., Ed.; Wiley-Interscience: New York, 1972; Vol. 111, pp 1347-1483. (2) Schadt, F. L., IIL; Lancelot, C. 3.; Schleyer, P. v. R. J. Am. Chem. SOC.1978,100, 228-246, and references cited therein. (3) (a) Huisgen, R. Angew. Chem. 1957,69,341-359. (b) Huisgen, R.; Seidl, G . Chem. Ber. 1963, 273C-2739. ( c ) Huisgen, R.; Seidl, G. Chem. Ber. 1963,2740-2749. (d) Huisgen, R.; Rauenbusch, E.; Seidl, G.; Wimmer, I. Ann. 1964, 671, 41-57. (e) Huisgen, R.; Seidl, G. Tetrahedron 1964,20, 231-241. (0 Huisgen, R.; Seidl, G.; Wimmer, I. Tetrahedron 1964,20,623-631. (9) Seidl, G.; Huisgen, R.; Hill, J. H. M. Tetrahedron 1964,20,633-640. (h) Seidl, G.; Huisgen, R. Chem. Ber. 1964,249-254. (4) (a) Cram, D. J.; Singer, L. A. J . Am. Chem. SOC.1963, 85> 1075-1079. (b) Cram, D. J.; Harris, F. L., Jr. J. Am. Chem. SOC.1967, 89, 4642-4651. (5) Nwent. M. J.: Vieo. T. L. J.Am. Chem. SOC.1969.91.5483-5486. (6) Ol&, G. A,; SpeG, R. J.; Forsyth, D. A. J. Am. C h e k SOC.1976, 98, 6284-6289. (7) For a review, see: Tanida, H. Acc. Chem. Res., 1968,1, 239-245.

0022-3263/86/1951-1838$01.50/0

The static interactions of the two benzene nuclei of [2.2lparacyclophane and other cyclophanes have been re-

ported in studies of the acidity of cyclophanecarboxylic acid8 and donor-acceptor complex f ~ r m a t i o n . ~ Sheehan and Cramgbshowed that [ 2.2]paracyclophane, which has the shortest spacing between the benzene nuclei and the deformed benzene rings,lO is less electron donating than [3.3]paracyclophane. Furthermore, UV spectroscopyga indicates that the nature of [n.n]paracyclophanes should approach that of the corresponding a,w-diarylalkanes as n increases. Accordingly, [3.3]paracyclophane, which shows the strongest static transannular H-H interaction, should also show strong "H-H through space" effects in solvolysis reactions. Hedaya and Kyle have studied phenonium ion incorporated in the [2.2]paracyclophane ring system." They (8) Segel, M. G.; Liotta, C. L.; Cram, D. J. J. Am. Chem. SOC.1982, 104, 1387-1391. (9) (a) Cram, D. J.; Bauer, R. Y. J . Am. Chem. SOC. 1959, 81, 5971-5977. (b) Sheehan, M.; Cram, D. J. J. Am. Chem. SOC.1969, 91, 3553-3558. (10) As a review, see: Cram, D. J.; Cram, J. M. Acc. Chem. Res. 1971, 4, 204-213. (11) Hedaya, E.; Kyle, L. M. J. Am. Chem. SOC.1966,88,3667-3669.

0 1986 American Chemical Society